This subreddit is for users who are willing to seek out AMA participants and inform them of what /r/IAmA is and how an AMA is done. Users here can post requests offering a reward for bringing in an AMA, and users can post followups when the AMA is secured.

Guidelines:

The AMA request must fit the AMA guidelines; if it would not be allowed as an AMA, then it is not an AMA request.

You must use a tag in your post: [Reward], [No Reward], or [Followup]. Posts without a tag will be removed.

Offering a reward for the AMA is not required, but your post will certainly get a lot more attention if users are motivated to fulfill it.

Posting the person's contact information is helpful, but not required. The purpose of this is to make it easier to fulfill your request, so of course you want to help them. Contact information must be publicly available.

Posting 5 questions is helpful, but not required. The purpose of these questions is to show AMA participants that you have something good to ask them, so it could help get your request fulfilled.

Users who offer a reward and do not come through with that promise will be banned from /r/IAmA, and thus not allowed to participate in the post fulfilling their request.

Helpful resources to use when arranging an AMA:

/r/IAmA One-sheet. This helpful document gives the person a quick overview of what /r/IAmA is all about. Attach this when emailing a person for the first time.

Beginner's Guide to IAmA. This document gives the person a tutorial on using Reddit, submitting a post, and answering questions. It is a bit outdated, but we're working on an updated one. Use this when they want to know more about how Reddit works.

Topic-specific guides to /r/IAmA. These are useful to supplement knowledge or help them solve a specific problem.